Lower house of French parliament votes to extend state of emergency
The lower house of the French parliament has voted to extend a nation-wide state of emergency for another six months.
The National Assembly passed a motion early on Wednesday to extend the emergency state until July 15, 2017, after the presidential election in the European country.
The legislative measure will also need to be approved by French lawmakers in the parliament’s upper house, the Senate, where an easy pass is expected on Thursday.
It would be the fifth renewal of the national emergency state, which first came into force in November 2015 after the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group carried out a string of attacks in and around the French capital of Paris, killing 130 people.
Extraordinary police powers, however, failed to prevent another major terror attack, in the coastal city of Nice, that killed 86 participants in a national holiday event during street celebrations in July.
During the Paris attacks in 2015, Daesh-affiliated terrorists used guns and explosive vests to strike almost simultaneously a concert hall, a major stadium, and restaurants and bars, injuring hundreds in addition to those killed.
French President Francois Hollande described the terror attacks as an “act of war.” Police forces conducted hundreds of raids across the country in search of suspects. Raids were also conducted in the Belgian city of Brussels, where a main suspect was arrested.
In the Nice attack, another Daesh-affiliated terrorist, identified as a 31-year-old Tunisian, drove a truck into crowds of people celebrating the Bastille Day holiday on a major street, killing the 86, including a number of children, and wounding over 300 people.